| General > General Technical Chat |
| Cockatoos are eating my new decking! |
| << < (8/13) > >> |
| Rick Law:
--- Quote from: MK14 on March 25, 2016, 12:37:02 am --- --- Quote from: Rick Law on March 25, 2016, 12:05:44 am ---The video is funny, but I have mixed feelings. I love cats. I too have a motion sensor deploy to detect cats but for entirely different reasons. ... After a particular snow storm, I wanted to know if the cats are okay. Rather than something elebrate, I made something quick and dirty to photo whoever comes for dinner; with just the things I have laying around:... ... --- End quote --- You should have added image recognition and a (normally closed) motorized lid opening food container. Program it with images of your favourite cat(s), then just leave it to automatically feed the right one(s). --- End quote --- Yeah, I thought about doing something more elborate but just doesn't get around to it. All I want to know is that the cats makes it through a hard winter. My simple solution does the job. Too many faults positive but does the job adequately well. |
| Rick Law:
--- Quote from: Rick Law on March 25, 2016, 12:05:44 am ---The video is funny, but I have mixed feelings. I love cats. ... ... --- End quote --- I just want to clarify some. I am not implying there is anything wrong with spraying cats with water. In fact, I too used water to discipline my own cat. That was not my "mixed feelings". I was reminded of my first cat: killed by the hands of my neightbor. The cat was around 12 years old. Too old to run away fast enough away from danger. It was not mere guessing. I saw him tried the same on my second cat. Having observed what he was attempting, I then I realized how come my first cat died in such strange situation. My second cat never left the house again until after I moved. That was a long time ago. My second cat died of cancer in old age. While it was a long time ago, but I can still picture that night when I caught him in the act. |
| cdev:
I had a friend several years ago who had a salmon crested cockatiel named Sophie. She was really smart, really affectionate, and spoke things which made sense in context. I house-sat for her a few times and Sophie was so much fun that since then I have always thought it would be fun to have one. Much more fun than cats. |
| Halcyon:
--- Quote from: cdev on March 25, 2016, 04:24:27 am ---I had a friend several years ago who had a salmon crested cockatiel named Sophie. She was really smart, really affectionate, and spoke things which made sense in context. I house-sat for her a few times and Sophie was so much fun that since then I have always thought it would be fun to have one. --- End quote --- Some birds (specially your parrots etc...) are bloody smart. Sometimes too smart. Just got to watch what you say around them if you don't want it repeated ;-) --- Quote from: cdev on March 25, 2016, 04:24:27 am ---Much more fun than cats. --- End quote --- Also true. |
| Mechanical Menace:
--- Quote from: Halcyon on March 25, 2016, 05:09:26 am ---Some birds (specially your parrots etc...) are bloody smart. Sometimes too smart. Just got to watch what you say around them if you don't want it repeated --- End quote --- Actually parrots aren't that smart with the exception of a couple of highly trained individuals. They're not even natural mimics, that takes training too. Your corvids on the other hand would give some people a run for their money. They don't only make and use tools without training, they use multiple tools to solve some problems. EDIT: Autocorrect changed corvids to cormorants. That's my excuse and I'm sticking to it :-\ |
| Navigation |
| Message Index |
| Next page |
| Previous page |